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Thursday, January 23, 2014

The Hunt (2012)

Just as man has succumbed to the urge to kill, fight, and procreate since the beginning of time, also has man had the tendency to persecute others without clear or rational explanation. These attacks, popularly called ‘witch hunts,’ come under fire in the Academy-Award nominated Danish film “The Hunt,” which tells the story of how one little girl’s lie has devastating consequences. These consequences affect not only one man, but a whole community.

Lucas (Mads Mikkelsen) a mild-mannered, reserved divorcee and father of a teenaged son (Lasse Fogelstrøm)works at the local Kindergarten. He is fighting to gain more time with his son, and enjoys the company of the kindergarten kids as well as his Swedish girlfriend, Nadja (Alexandra Rapaport.) Lucas is well-liked by the community, but is best friend is Theo (Thomas Bo Larsen,) the often-drunk father of Klara (Annika Wedderkopp,) a troubled young girl who is beginning to show symptoms of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.

When Lucas rejects Klara’s innocent-yet-inappropriate advances in forms of a gift and a kiss, Klara makes up a lie that has far-reaching consequences. Accused of indecent behavior towards the children of the Kindergarten, Lucas must deal with the loss of his career, his friends, and his safe niche in the community. Suddenly, he is distrusted by everyone, and people shun him and outwardly lash out at him. By the time Klara tries to take it back, it’s too late. Everything has changed.

Is this the face of evil?

I don’t really blame Klara for the way things turns out- I’m angry, yes, but I cannot hate or dismiss her. By the time the chips have fallen into place, she barely remembers what did or didn’t happen. Unlike the events in Craig Zobel’s “Compliance,” which were set off and carried past a certain point by pure idiocy (although "Compliance" is supposedly based on a real-life case,) the events in "The Hunt" are frighteningly plausible and even, for a while, understandable.

I loved the first scene. In a seemingly jolly outburst of mirth and indiscretion, a group of male friends go skinny-dipping in a cold lake. For a moment, all is well. Then a chill falls over the film as we are shown a shot of a chilly landscape. The amiable notes of "Moondance" by Van Morrison fade into pure silence. All is not well. Disaster is hovering over the hero's head, and he will find himself doing and saying some things he never expected too.

Save the children!

Mads Mikkelsen is just terrific in the lead role. His portrayal of a desperate man going to desperate lengths to be heard is so dark and deep, you never doubt it for a second. All the actors are actually very good. Annika Wedderkopp, as five-year-old navigating conflicts way above her maturity level, is a young talent to
watch.

"The Hunt" is just electrifying to watch because of the daunting relevance of the situation. Akin to the Salem Witch Trials, after Klara has told her lie, many of the schoolchildren start reporting abuse. You can imagine yourself in a situation like that, because if a little girl came to you revealing things she shouldn't know, who would you believe? The adult, despite your nagging suspicions? Or the child, despite your friendship with the man in question. We all hate pedophiles. But what happens when that hatred becomes irrational and turns us into something monstrous? Very interesting food for thought. Rating- 8.0/10

4 comments:

Good review Sarah. A scary movie that plays with the ideas of an actual horror that could happen to anyone, at any time, and in any place. All there needs to be is a relative-amount of chatter, and all of a sudden, that one person is branded for life as something they may, or may not deserve. Hate to sound so paranoid, but it's a fact of reality we live in.

Great review. This film was wonderfully frustrating at times (I agree with your Compliance comparison. That movie angered be beyond belief, I couldn't enjoy it at all.) I didn't really place all of the blame on Klara either, most of it went to the teacher she told, and how incredibly unprofessional she was about the entire situation.

Ha ha I felt the same way about "Compliance!" Throughout the movie, I was just like "Raa! How can people be so fucking stupid!!?" Out of curiosity , (not challenging you,) how exactly was the teacher unprofessional? I thought she did her best in a tough situation. The character I was REALLY fuming at was the girl's mother. When the girl says "I was just being stupid" (or something like that) and the mother tries to convince her it happened I was SO angry. ARGH! Thanks for the interesting comment.

Good review. I don't blame Klara at all. Five year olds lie all the time. They don't have the capacity to understand that some lies are worse than others. The one I blame is the woman who escalated it all. I don't blame her for being concerned, but bringing in a non-professional to question the girl was very irresponsible. Then she escalated it by calling his wife to tell her not to let his son come, THEN she announced it to the whole community before there was any evidence, let alone an investigation.

And this is all too real an occurrence. There was a famous case at a Day Care where a woman with a history of mental health issues accused them of molesting her kid. In reading the transcripts the children in the daycare were asked VERY leading questions, just like in this film. And even though most of the kids' story was that they had been molested in outerspace the day care operators were still prosecuted. Witch hunts are very much still with us and that's what makes this film so scary.

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